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  • Lincs Reader - Unique and Magical Fairy StorySamantha Van Leer is Jodi Picoult's daughter, and the idea for Between The Lines came from her. Jodi and Samantha developed the idea together, and have written the story jointly. It will be published in the UK on 5 July 2012 by Hodder and Stoughton.
    I'm a massive fan of Jodi Picoult's novels, devouring each one as they are published. I also read quite a lot of Young Adult fiction and was intrigued by the idea of this novel.

    Between The Lines is a very clever concept - a story within a story. Delilah is a modern-day American teenager, she's a bit awkward, she doesn't hang out with the cool crowd and she is obsessed with Oliver.
    Oliver is no ordinary boy, he's a character in a children's fairy story. He's just a line drawing, a figment of an author's imagination, but he is Delilah's dream man. She knows the story by heart, she knows every line and every illustration ..... until one day she notices that one of the pictures has changed ...... and then Oliver speaks to her!
    Combining fairy story with a modern coming-of-age tale this really is a very clever and unique novel. Yes, it is magic, but it also deals with real issues, those faced by teenage girls all over the world. Jodi Picoult's writing style is at the forefront throughout the story, peppered along the way with some real humour that at times is almost tongue-in-cheek.

    Oliver is desperate to get out of the fairy tale and Delilah is desperate for a friend. The fast paced plot follows their attempts to be together. Delilah has to deal with her Mother's increasing worries about her, how can she prove that she doesn't need to see a shrink, even though she's been caught talking to a book?

    Between The Lines is great fun and an ideal way for younger readers to sample Jodi Picoult's writing style. Samantha Van Leer has inherited her Mother's talent and I'm positive that this is the start of a very successful writing career for her. Her imagination combined with her humour are an ideal mix.

    Suspend all disbelief and enjoy this story for what it is, a magical fairy story with a cast of real-life characters.
  • M. Reilly - It's no miracle, it's science.I'm just like everyone else on here, sick, modern medicine does nothing more than take my money, and I'm in desperate need of a 'cure' (or at least some way to get my life back to something that at least resembles normalcy). After being diagnosed with Celiac's Disease and sticking to a strict gluten free diet I wasn't getting better, this diet is literally the only thing that has yet to help me. People say the diet is hard, and yea, I guess it is at first (like anything worthwhile is), but it's like others have already stated, you're not going to get a magic pill, so buck up. It's worth it. And besides, it's not any different than how we were eating fifty years ago, we got ourselves in a big hurry to get somewhere... but where? We are spoiled. As a species we can't continue eating this way, packaged and pumped full of chemicals, eat a burger without even getting out of the driver's seat, it just doesn't work. Technology evolves much faster than our guts. But I digress, the diet works (of course not for everyone, we're all different with different issues from different sources), and it explains in simple science how and why it works. It ain't brain surgery. It ain't a cult. It's all pretty straight forward. The book could be better written, sure the text could be smaller (ha!) and better organized, but those seem pretty irrelevant to me. (and there are no major discrepancies that I noticed, the whole bacon thing she is merely saying if you can't find sugar free fry the hell out of it and only indulge once a week)

    I have the worst self discipline in the world (no, really) and I'm doing it just fine. It only seemed hard for the first week or so, now its just my norm, just like hitting the Wendy's up for lunch used to be my norm. If I can I try to spend one afternoon or evening putting together several dishes to eat off of for the week, when I make dinner I make lots of extras, I use the heck out of my crock pot. I hardly use any of the recipes in the book, its just a starting point, just an idea generator, the possibilities on this diet truly are endless and plenty of recipes are naturally SCD legal (I still get lots of ideas from Good Eats, as well as many blogs online). I think of it as a lifestyle change, not just a diet I have to put up with. No reason for deficiencies in carbs or vitamins as other people have said, the book isn't gospel and there's a wealth of information outside the book these days as well, you still need to make educated decisions and pay attention to what you need and don't need. I find this diet way less restrictive than many others and I have been able to make everything I can dream of without cheating. Even pizza and donuts. It's fun.

    In reality me getting better was more a mental adjustment than a physical one, finding the discipline to make changes, stopping the denial that I didn't really need to change. I am a stronger person inside and out because of it. If you're sick of being sick, TRY IT.